The Christian’s place is in the world, where he must proclaim Jesus, but his eyes are fixed on heaven, where he will be united with Him. The Scriptures give us three words, three points of reference for the Christian pilgrimage. The first is memory. The risen Jesus tells his disciples to go to Galilee, where they first met him. Each of us has our own Galilee, that is, the place where Jesus first appeared, where we came to know Him and received the joy and enthusiasm of following Him. To be good Christians, it is essential to remember this first and subsequent encounter with Jesus constantly. This is the grace of memory, which gives us certainty in times of trial.
The second point is prayer. When Jesus ascends to heaven, he does not separate himself from us. Physically yes, but he remains constantly united with us to intercede for us. He shows the Father his wounds, the price he paid for us, for our salvation. We must therefore ask for the grace of contemplation of heaven, the grace of prayer, a relationship with Jesus who hears us and is with us. Then there is the third: the world. Before his departure, as we heard yesterday in the Gospel of the Ascension, Jesus says to his disciples: “Go into all the world”. Go. The Christian’s place is the world, to proclaim the Word of Jesus, to announce that we are saved and that Jesus came to give us the grace to take us all with him to the Father.
This is the topography of Christian thought. Three points of support for our life: memory, prayer, andto missionary mission; three words for our journey: Galilee, heaven and world. The Christian must move in these three dimensions, asking for the grace of memory and saying to the Lord: “May I not forget the moment you chose me, may I not forget the moments when we met.” Praying and looking to heaven, because there He intercedes for us. And then the mission. This does not mean that everyone has to go abroad. Going on missions means living and testifying to the Gospel, letting people know what Jesus is like. And this is through testimony and the Word, because if I talk about what Jesus is like and what the Christian life is like, but I live like a pagan, it is useless. Such a mission is useless.
However, if we live with memory, prayer, and missions, the Christian life will be beautiful and joyful. And this is the last sentence of Jesus from today’s Gospel (John 16:20-23): “On the day you live as a Christian, you will know everything, and your joy will not be taken from you. “Noto one, because I have in my memory the encounter with Jesus, the certainty that Jesus is now in heaven, interceding for me and with me. I pray; I dare to go out of myself, to speak to others, and to testify with my life that Jesus is risen from the dead and is alive. Memory, prayer, mission. May the Lord grant us the grace to understand this topography of Christian life and to move forward with a joy that no one can take from us.